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Broward County Home Prices Inch Up in 2011

According to Florida Realtors on Friday, home prices in Broward County rose 4% last year.

The year-end median price in Broward was $186,000, compared with $179,200 in 2010.

The number of homes for sale countywide declined sharply in 2011. Increased demand for fewer homes helped to stabilize prices, but real estate agents and analysts warn that the market may not hit bottom until 2013.

In Palm Beach County, the median price last year was $193,700, off 15% from 2010.

Meanwhile, sales soared in both counties as foreign investors and other cash buyers rushed to take advantage of prices last seen in 2002.

Broward had 12,817 existing home sales for the year, up 11% from 2010. Palm Beach County rose 24% to 11,900.

Home sales nationally last year increased slightly from 2010.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, said in a statement that the nation’s housing market is slowly recovering from the downturn that began in 2006.

He concludes: “The pattern of home sales in recent months demonstrates a market in recovery. Record low mortgage interest rates, job growth and bargain home prices are giving more consumers the confidence they need to enter the market.”

 Broward County Home Prices Inch Up in 2011

February South Florida Home Sales Increase

115x150 February South Florida Home Sales Increase

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According for Florida Realtors this past Monday, South Florida home sales increased in February for a second in a row. Broward County recorded 909 sales of existing homes, up 16% from a year ago. In Palm Beach County, 738 homes traded hands, up 32% from a year-ago February.

According to the National Association of Realtors, sales continue to be bolstered by investors paying cash. In fact, all-cash deals nationwide hit a record 33% last month.

Still, tight credit and lingering issues with home appraisals are hurting some deals, Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the national Realtors’ group, states: “This tug and pull is causing a gradual but uneven recovery.”

Prices, meanwhile, showed resiliency in February. Broward’s median home price was $167,000, up 22% from a year ago and 1% from January. Palm Beach County’s median price was $205,400, down 6% from last year but up 7% from January.

 February South Florida Home Sales Increase

Cash Home Sales Dominate South Florida Market

300px Hundred dollar bill 02 Cash Home Sales Dominate South Florida Market

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The reign of cut-rate mortgages and easy home loans has finally come to a halt in South Florida, making way for the return of the king — CASH.
According to Zillow.com, about 54% of home purchases in Palm Beach, Broward andMiami-Dade counties were cash buys in the final quarter of 2010. That’s about 7,530 homes and condominiums between October and December that were paid for with cash instead of borrowing. In South Florida’s real estate zenith of 2006, just 13% of sales were in cash. In pre-boom 1997, cash buys made up 31% of the market.

Of 11 major metropolitan areas in the country studied by Zillow, South Florida had the highest percentage of cash buys in the fourth quarter of last year.

Corcoran Group agent Anthony Pizzarelli, who specializes in downtown West Palm Beach condos, states: “I haven’t pulled a mortgage in six months. You just have a lot of people with a lot of cash running around.”

Many of those financially blessed consumers, however, are not South Floridians buying a homestead.

Investors and international buyers are driving the cash deals, including Canadians who get loans in their own country to buy winter escapes here with ready money.

Stricter lending standards also are contributing to the plethora of cash buys.

Spring Hill, Tenn. residents during the summer, Bill and Clara Marie Jessup typically rent a place in South Florida through the fall and winter.

This year, with bargain-basement home prices, the couple decided to buy. They shopped for about two weeks before getting a $149,000 cash contract on a three-bedroom, two-bathroom pool home in Palm Beach Gardens that is bank-owned.

Clara Marie Jessup said they decided to pay cash because they believe a home will bring a better return on their money than a CD or other investment.

“Any kind of interest income is so low right now, we might as well put it into a house,” she said. “If prices go down any more, they’re not likely to go down appreciably.”

Ally Bank was offering 1.84% interest last week on a three-year CD. Nationwide Bank offered 1.85%. Jessups’ Realtor Shannon Brink, of Re/Max Prestige Realty in West Palm Beach states: “Hopefully it’s a good sign that the economy is turning around. People are spending money again on Florida real estate.”

According to reports released last week by Realtor groups, sales of existing homes jumped nationally and in Florida in January. Statewide, sales were up 14% compared with January last year. They rose 36% in Palm Beach County.

The National Association of Realtors said the increases were fueled by cash purchases, which accounted for 32% of January home buys nationwide. That’s the highest level since the group started measuring cash deals in October 2008 when they accounted for 15 percent of the market.

According to Kent Clothier, CEO of REI Marketing, LLC in Boca Raton, in Palm Beach County, 2,039 cash deals were done in the last few months of 2010, up 45% compared with the same time in 2009.

William Stronge, a professor emeritus in economics at Florida Atlantic University, said the cash buys are indicative of how far the market has fallen, and will have both a negative and positive effect on South Florida.

While cash is helping sell homes to international investors, it’s not helping create financial sector jobs in the mortgage industry. He states: “In that sense, there might be a slight negative. But on the other hand, you’re attracting people into the market who might not have come otherwise.”

A cash deal is a necessity for Paul Advani. A Toronto Realtor looking to buy a place in South Florida, Advani said he wouldn’t qualify for a U.S. loan. He states: “That doesn’t mean I have cash, cash, cash in my pocket. But I can borrow here and pay cash there.”

Plus, Advani said he thinks he’ll get a lower price with cash. He concludes: “They know the deal is done when it’s cash, there’s no waiting. Cash has power, cash is king.”

 Cash Home Sales Dominate South Florida Market

Home Sales Surge Across South Florida Thanks to Investors

115x150 Home Sales Surge Across South Florida Thanks to Investors

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

According to Florida Realtors, this past January, home sales rose sharply across Palm Beach and Broward counties. Palm Beach County had 745 existing homes trade hands, up 36% from a year ago. Broward sales increased 18% to 813. Existing condo sales in both counties also were robust. Home sales surged across Florida and the nation. Many of the sales are cash deals from investors. Nationally, the share of first-time buyers in January slipped to 29%, down from 40% a year ago.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, said in a statement: “Increases in all-cash transactions, the investor market share and distressed home sales all go hand-in-hand. With tight credit standards, it’s not surprising to see so much activity where cash is king and investors are taking advantage of conditions to purchase undervalued homes.”

While sales were strong, prices were down. Broward’s median home price in January was $165,100, off 5% from a year ago. Palm Beach County’s median fell 19% to $192,800.

 Home Sales Surge Across South Florida Thanks to Investors

South Florida Housing Market Dominated by Cash Buyers

300px Cshpi peak.svg South Florida Housing Market Dominated by Cash Buyers

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According to Zillow.com, cash buyers represented more than half of all transactions in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area last year. In the fourth quarter of 2006, they represented just 13% of deals. Meanwhile, downtown Miami prices rose 15% in 2010 from a year earlier, according to the Miami Downtown Development Authority.

According to Raymond James’s equity research division, the percentage of buyers in Phoenix paying cash hit 42% in 2010 — more than triple the rate in 2008.

Nationally, 28% of sales were all-cash transactions last year, according to the National Association of Realtors. The rate was 14% in October 2008, when the trade group began tracking the measure.

Richard Stoker, a retired sales executive, recently plunked down cash for two condominiums in Miami Beach, and plans to close on one more in coming days. He loves the complex’s ocean views, four swimming pools and activities such as yoga and Pilates. But what also motivated the purchase, said the 73-year-old, was that “the prices were just irresistible. Florida’s been hit pretty hard.” Stoker could have taken out mortgages, but decided to pay cash. He states: “It was a good time to lighten up in the art market and take on real estate at a favorable price.”

Some of the cash purchases reflect a tight lending environment, where even people with good credit and ample down payments are sometimes turned away for conventional borrowing.

Henry Schlangen, an agent with real-estate firm Pacific Union International who buys and sells for clients, states: “The rates are great but the underwriting is brutal. They hang these people upside down and shake them till they see what falls out of their pockets. So people are buying with cash and maybe they’ll ‘refi’ later.”

Nationally, it isn’t clear whether prices have bottomed. The Case-Shiller index of housing prices in 20 cities showed a steep decline in prices until 2009, when they appeared to bottom and began to trend upward. But in the second half of last year, prices began falling again.

 South Florida Housing Market Dominated by Cash Buyers

Average Rate on 30-Year Fixed Mortgage Increases to 4.74%

300px Freddie Mac.svg Average Rate on 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Increases to 4.74%
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Following increases in Treasury yields, the average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage rose slightly this week.

Yesterday, Freddie Mac announced that the average rate rose to 4.74% this week from 4.71& the previous week. The average rate on the 15-year loan, a popular refinance option, slipped to 4.05% from 4.08%.

Mortgage rates have changed little in the new year after spiking more than half a percentage point in the last two months. Investors sold off Treasurys bonds during that stretch, driving yields lower. Mortgage rates tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note.

The 30-year loan rate reached a 40-year low of 4.17% in November, and the 15-year mortgage rate fell to 3.57%, the lowest level on records dating back to 1991.

Yesterday, the National Association of Realtors said the historically low rates have done little to boost the struggling housing market. Fewer people bought previously owned homes last year than in any year since 1997. The group said sales fell 4.8% last year to 4.91 million units. That was a few thousand homes lower than sales levels in 2008, making it the worst level in 13 years.

Record high foreclosures, a weak job market and expectations that prices will fall further have convinced potential buyers to hold off on purchasing homes.

In order to calculate average mortgage rates, Freddie Mac collects rates from lenders across the country on Monday through Wednesday of each week. Rates often fluctuate significantly, even within a single day.

The average rate on a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage slipped to 3.69% from 3.72%. The five-year hit 3.25% last month, the lowest rate on records dating back to January 2005.

The average rate on one-year adjustable-rate home loans rose to 3.25% from 3.23%.

The rates do not include add-on fees, known as points. One point is equal to 1% of the total loan amount. The average fee for the 30-year and 15-year loan in Freddie Mac’s survey was 0.8 point. The average fee for the five-year ARM was 0.7 point, and the fee for the 1-year ARM was 0.6 point.

 Average Rate on 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Increases to 4.74%

As South Florida Home Prices Decline in September, Double Dip is Predicted

300px USA Miami Dade County%2C Florida age pyramid.svg As South Florida Home Prices Decline in September, Double Dip is Predicted
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Today, the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller Home Price Index showed that prices in Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties fell 1.2% last month from August and 2.7% from a year ago.

David M. Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at S&P, said broad-based declines could mean a “double dip” in home prices before the spring. He states: “The national economy is certainly the number one issue for housing. Additionally, there is a large supply of houses on the market and further, hidden supply due to delinquent mortgages, pending foreclosures or vacant homes. New construction is running at less than half the pace needed to meet normal demand, so a sustained recovery could be a ways off.”

The index measures prices of the same house over time, rather than recording median prices for homes sold in a month.

 As South Florida Home Prices Decline in September, Double Dip is Predicted

Foreclosure Freeze Hurts South Florida Home Sales in October

3402851924 f7bb985f57 m Foreclosure Freeze Hurts South Florida Home Sales in October
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As the result of the foreclosure freezes by big lenders, home sales in South Florida and across the state plunged in October.

Yesterday, Florida Realtors announced that sales of existing homes in Broward County fell 28% last month from a year ago, while sales in Palm Beach County dropped 14%. And overall, sales in Florida declined by 21% from October 2009.

Broward’s median home price in October was $217,900, up 3% from a year ago. Palm Beach County’s median was $221,200, off 9% from October 2009.

Broward’s existing condo sales fell by 20% last month, and the median condo price dropped 19% to $67,500. Palm Beach County condo sales were virtually unchanged, but the median price plummeted 27% to $79,600.

Lawrence Yun, the chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, stated: “The housing market is experiencing an uneven recovery, and a temporary foreclosure stoppage in some states is likely to have held back a number of completed sales.”

However Yun also noted that “there appears to be a pent-up demand that eventually will be unleashed as banks resolve their issues with foreclosures and the labor market improves.”

He predicts a gradual rise in home sales, though he said difficulty getting financing and appraisals coming in below negotiated prices are hurting the market.

 Foreclosure Freeze Hurts South Florida Home Sales in October

Obama Administration Officials Reject Idea of National Foreclosure Moratorium

Evidence of several major servicers mishandling foreclosure paperwork in their rush to work through the still-growing backlog of cases has cast a cloud of doubt over the entire industry and servicing procedures across the board.

Consumer advocacy groups and a number of state attorneys general have demanded a nationwide moratorium on foreclosures. However, a senior White House official has indicated that the Obama administration will not support an all-out foreclosure freeze.

David Axelrod, one of President Obama’s top advisors, appeared on CBS’ Face the Nation this weekend, and the foreclosure paperwork debacle was Bob Schieffer’s topic of choice.

Axelrod acknowledged that the allegations of faulty foreclosure documentation are a “serious problem” and “thrown a lot of uncertainty into the housing market.”

However, he noted that the administration’s hope is that the process will  “move rapidly and get unwound very, very quickly.”  He states: “I’m not sure about a national moratorium because there are, in fact, valid foreclosures that probably should go forward and where the documentation and paperwork is proper. We are working closely with these institutions to make sure that they expedite the process of going back and reconstructing these and throwing out those that don’t work.”

In an email to the Washington Post, David Stevens, commissioner of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), echoed Axelrod’s stance. He states: “We believe freezing foreclosures for all banks in all states, whether we have reason to believe them to be in error or not, is simply not the prudent step to take in this fragile housing market. While we understand the eagerness to make sure that no American is foreclosed upon in error, we must be careful not to over-reach and apply a remedy that will make the underlying problem of foreclosures worse.”

So far, five companies have announced voluntary foreclosure suspensions because of potential deficiencies in the legal paperwork.

GMAC Mortgage was the first to halt foreclosures in 23 judicial states.

JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America suit two weeks later. On Friday, BofA announced that it is expanding its moratorium to include all 50 states.

PNC Financial and Goldman Sachs’ Litton Loan Servicing have also called for a stop to foreclosures in certain states.

The servicers contend that any errors made are procedural and have stated that they expect only minor and temporary delays in foreclosure timelines due to the suspensions, but others say the latest developments are sure to disrupt the already tenuous balance of the housing correction.

Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics, told the Associated Press that the foreclosure paperwork scandal could prolong housing’s slump for at least several more years. A mere month ago, before the documentation mistakes came to light, Zandi was predicting that an upturn would be well under way by this time next year.

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), along with several other industry trade groups, sent a letter to members of Congress on Friday expressing concern over the additional damage a blanket national moratorium would bring.

The letter stated, “It is important to note…that these are document process reviews; in almost all cases there are no factual disputes about whether the mortgage is delinquent, the amount of the arrears or whether foreclosure is proper. In the overwhelming majority of cases, we believe the facts presented to the courts in foreclosure proceedings about the debt amounts and delinquencies have been accurate. A foreclosure moratorium would not change the ultimate outcome for borrowers impacted by this situation, but only cause further harm to communities at risk, the unstable housing market, and the fragile economy.”

Home Sales Decline in Palm Beach & Broward

2539334956 87cef7e457 m Home Sales Decline in Palm Beach & Broward

Sign Of The Times - Foreclosure

As predicted, South Florida home sales continue to slide following the expiration of the federal home buyer tax credits this past summer.

Today, according to Florida Realtors, Broward County posted 683 sales of existing homes in August, down 5% from July and 16% from a year ago. Palm Beach County had 793 homes trade hands last month, down slightly from July but up 5% from August 2009.

Nationally, existing home sales rose 7.6% in August to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.13 million units from 3.84 million in July. Still, sales remain 19% below a year ago.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, stated: “The housing market is trying to recover on its own power without the home buyer tax credit . Despite very attractive affordability conditions, a housing market recovery will likely be slow and gradual because of lingering economic uncertainty.”

According to leading analysts,  the tax incentives gone combined with the reeling job market has many potential home buyers hesitant to commit. Demand probably won’t improve for the rest of the year.

Slower sales likely will hurt prices. South Florida median prices are down compared with a year ago.

Broward’s median in August was $206,700, off 5% from August 2009. Palm Beach County’s median was $227,800, a 7% decline from a year ago.

 Home Sales Decline in Palm Beach & Broward
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